Refugees from Syria have begun registering on a passenger ferry moored in the harbor at Kos. The aim is to help the small Greek island cope with the recent influx of migrants from across the Mediterranean. Syrians have priority as they are fleeing a conflict situation. But there is anger at what is seen as preferential treatment. “I have been waiting for help but have not had any,” one young man from Iraq told reporters. “The only help is for Syrians. They don’t know what has happened in Iraq, in Pakistan, in Iran. This is a big problem. If I tell them I am from Iraq, they send me away. They tell me to go away.” Services on Kos are stretched to breaking point. Thousands have made the perilous sea journey from the Middle East and North Africa and are sleeping rough. NGOs are doing what they can but there are stark warnings. “We are asking the authorities to help us. We are alone. We are alone and this place is impossible to work in, it’s impossible to provide assistance for
people who are here for 20 days. We are reaching a point that we cannot, we cannot give any more help because it’s too much.” said Medecins Sans Frontieres Communications Officer Julia Kourafa. Official figures suggest nearly quarter of a million migrants have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe this year already. In the battle to cope with Europe’s growing migrant crisis, the tiny island of Kos has found itself on the frontline.